Can you give some examples?
Most of Soviet documents were typed on a regular sheet of paper and had a round ink stamp. Easily forged by all sorts of characters, from petty criminals to Nazi saboteurs.
Can you give some examples?
In self defense!Best way is to kill them all.
I wonder why this wasn't a problem in the West.Typewriters were used to forge documents. Forged documents were a huge problem in Russia.
Typewriters were used to forge documents. Forged documents were a huge problem in Russia.
Guns may be a big problem here...but a Constitution prevents confiscation...so far..and saying forged documents were a problem so they confiscated typewriter's is like rubbing the @$$ of a bad child. make s no sense
Maybe if the West did fuck off, instead of trying to destroy them, they wouldn't need to take all these measures.
Uh, what?
Who or what is "them" in this statement?
Maybe if the West did fuck off, instead of trying to destroy them, they wouldn't need to take all these measures.
Yeah the soviets, the ones that vowed they would destroy America from within and claimed 'We will bury you'. Mean while in the west people had free access to soviet propaganda and a few, very, very few actually moved there, though the majority of them returned, mostly though when average people saw the real facts they scoffed at the ass backwards dictatorial system and chose freedom.
Typewriters and copiers were tools of the commies to spread their bullshit, they knew how powerful those tools could be. Confiscation and registration of those items had ZERO to do with your soviet patronizing reason's.
Robin
"Didn't want to upset their Eastern European allies"?
In what universe is anything in this statement remotely related to reality?
Didn't want to upset them?
"Allies"?
What the honest to God fuck are you smoking?
Warsaw Pact. The skeletons in the closet of Poland, Hungary and Romania. Their role in pre-WWII geopolitics.
Do you actually believe this stuff or are you an actual latter day agent provocateur?
What stuff? Documented history?
You can say with a straight face that the Warsaw Pact was a legitimate, multilateral treaty?
Holy Sheep Sh*t people. City and State Governments are allowing, enabling, and condoning violent riots. Countless State & Federal "representatives" are advocating for forcibly taking your rights, restricting your actions and movement, passing "aid" bills which take ever more of your earned money & interest, and the Media (controlled by massive and behind the scenes money) has pulled out all the stops on creating division, hatred, tribalism, and fear - and this conversation is a circular logic history lesson about Germany and the USSR? FFS - we're facing the kind of society they both forced on their citizens and instead of sticking to the point we hare off on distractions. Woo Hoo. Mission proceeding as planned. Don't look behind the green curtain.
There are people who have defected from North Korea that regretted it too.Actually many Germans who grew up in East Germany weren't happy after reunification with how things were in the West. They saw Western society as materialistic, shallow, self-indulgent with little morals . There is a saying, "not by bread alone".
Point being that we have honest to God soviet communism apologists in our midst so how do you expect to counter this shit?
A symptom perhaps but many symptoms have been known to be fatal.
The leaders of the BLM movement bragged publicly about being "trained Marxists".Just accept that nitwitary going on in America today doesn't parallel anything in the Soviet Union. People are not buying communist scare, it's simply a name calling.
There are people who have defected from North Korea that regretted it too.
But when so many people want to leave that you need to build a wall and shoot them if they try to escape, you aren't running a country, you're running a prison.
No, you are correct, borders have more than one purpose.Borders weren't build just to prevent people from leaving. They also kept out insurgents. There is always plenty of scum of the earth for CIA or others to train and sneek in, whether it's 1956 Hungary or 1995 Chechnya.
I’ve been kinda fascinated by the Soviet Union lately, largely because it fell when I was single digits in age. It’s an artifact to me. What humanizes it is that a lot of folks - maybe not most - didn’t want the Soviet thing to end. They got behind Gorbachev because they wanted it to be better. They liked the child care, higher ed, and equality, they just didn’t like the surveillance, shortage of goods, or lack of participation. The Soviet Union bred a want for a social democracy.
I don’t think people cared much about the borders or the lack of private business.
I do think western soft power does a lot more to take these structures down than hard power. Many СССР citizens paid top dollar for jeans, and listened to the BBC. It wore on the Soviets to where it couldn’t keep going on.
Then again, Reagan and Thatcher spent them into the grave.
Oh my, I have so much to learn. Fascinating time in history, that’s just where I am now.